Upgrading
Nomad is designed to be flexible and resilient when upgrading from one Nomad version to the next. Upgrades should cause neither a Nomad nor a service outage. However, there are some restrictions to be aware of before upgrading:
Nomad strives to be backward compatible for at least 1 point release, so Nomad v0.10 hosts work with v0.9 hosts. Upgrading 2 point releases (eg v0.8 to v0.10) may work but is untested and unsupported.
Nomad does not support downgrading at this time. Downgrading clients requires draining allocations and removing the data directory. Downgrading servers safely requires re-provisioning the cluster.
New features are unlikely to work correctly until all nodes have been upgraded.
Check the version upgrade details page for important changes and backward incompatibilities.
When upgrading a Nomad Client, if it takes longer than the
heartbeat_grace
(10s by default) period to restart, all allocations on that node may be rescheduled.
Nomad supports upgrading in place or by rolling in new servers:
In Place: The Nomad binary can be updated on existing hosts. Running allocations will continue running uninterrupted.
Rolling: New hosts containing the new Nomad version may be added followed by the removal of old hosts. The old nodes must be drained to migrate running allocations to the new nodes.
This guide describes both approaches.
Upgrade Process
Once you have checked the upgrade details for the new version, the upgrade process is as simple as updating the binary on each host and restarting the Nomad service.
At a high level we complete the following steps to upgrade Nomad:
- Add the new version
- Check cluster health
- Remove the old version
- Check cluster health
- Upgrade clients
1. Add the new version to the existing cluster
While it is possible to upgrade Nomad client nodes before servers, this guide recommends upgrading servers first as many new client features will not work until servers are upgraded.
In a federated cluster, new features are not guaranteed to work until all agents in a region and the server nodes in the authoritative region are upgraded.
Whether you are replacing Nomad in place on existing systems or bringing up new servers you should make changes incrementally, verifying cluster health at each step of the upgrade.
On a single server, install the new version of Nomad. You can do this by joining a new server to the cluster or by replacing or upgrading the binary locally and restarting the Nomad service.
Note that if you have leave_on_terminate
or leave_on_interrupt
set,
you should ensure you're using the expected signal for your upgrade process. For
example, if you have leave_on_terminate
set and you intend on updating a
server in-place, you should SIGINT
and not SIGTERM
when shutting down the
server before restarting it.
2. Check cluster health
Monitor the Nomad logs on the remaining servers to check that the new server has joined the cluster correctly.
Run nomad agent-info
on the new servers and check that the last_log_index
is of a similar value to the other servers. This step ensures that changes have
been replicated to the new server.
Continue with the upgrades across the servers making sure to do a single Nomad
server at a time. You can check state of the servers with nomad server members
, and the state of the client nodes with nomad node status
.
3. Remove the old versions from servers
If you are doing an in place upgrade on existing servers this step is not necessary as the version was changed in place.
If you are doing an upgrade by adding new servers and removing old servers from the fleet you need to ensure that the server has left the fleet safely.
- Stop the service on the existing host
- On another server issue a
nomad server members
and check the status, if the server is now in a left state you are safe to continue. - If the server is not in a left state, issue a
nomad server force-leave <server id>
to remove the server from the cluster.
Monitor the logs of the other hosts in the Nomad cluster over this period.
4. Check cluster health
Use the same actions in step #2 above to confirm cluster health.
5. Upgrade clients
Following the successful upgrade of the servers you can now update your
clients using a similar process as the servers. You may either upgrade clients
in-place or start new nodes on the new version. See the Workload Migration
Guide for instructions on how to migrate running
allocations from the old nodes to the new nodes with the nomad node drain
command.
Done
You are now running the latest Nomad version. You can verify all
Clients joined by running nomad node status
and checking all the clients
are in a ready
state.
Upgrading to Nomad Enterprise
The process of upgrading to a Nomad Enterprise version is identical to upgrading between versions of open source Nomad. The same guidance above should be followed and as always, prior to starting the upgrade please check the specific version details page as some version differences may require specific steps.
Upgrading to Raft Protocol 3
This section provides details on upgrading to Raft Protocol 3. Raft protocol version 3 requires Nomad running 0.8.0 or newer on all servers in order to work. Raft protocol version 2 will be removed in Nomad 1.4.0.
To see the version of the Raft protocol in use on each server, use the
nomad operator raft list-peers
command.
Note that the format of peers.json
used for outage recovery is
different when running with the latest Raft protocol. See Manual
Recovery Using
peers.json
for a description of the required format.
When using Raft protocol version 3, servers are identified by their
node-id
instead of their IP address when Nomad makes changes to its
internal Raft quorum configuration. This means that once a cluster has
been upgraded with servers all running Raft protocol version 3, it
will no longer allow servers running any older Raft protocol versions
to be added.
Upgrading a Production Cluster to Raft Version 3
For production raft clusters with 3 or more members, the easiest way
to upgrade servers is to have each server leave the cluster, upgrade
its raft_protocol
version in the server
block (if upgrading to
a version lower than v1.3.0), and then add it back. Make sure the new
server joins successfully and that the cluster is stable before
rolling the upgrade forward to the next server. It's also possible to
stand up a new set of servers, and then slowly stand down each of the
older servers in a similar fashion.
For in-place raft protocol upgrades, perform the following for each server, leaving the leader until last to reduce the chance of leader elections that will slow down the process:
- Stop the server.
- Run
nomad server force-leave $server_name
. - If the upgrade is for a Nomad version lower than v1.3.0, update the
raft_protocol
in the server's configuration file to3
. - Restart the server.
- Run
nomad operator raft list-peers
to verify that theRaftProtocol
for the server is now3
. - On the server, run
nomad agent-info
and check that thelast_log_index
is of a similar value to the other servers. This step ensures that raft is healthy and changes are replicating to the new server.
Upgrading a Single Server Cluster to Raft Version 3
If you are running a single Nomad server, restarting it in-place will
result in that server not being able to elect itself as a leader. To
avoid this, create a new raft.peers
file before
restarting the server with the new configuration. If you have jq
installed you can run the following script on the server's host to
write the correct raft.peers
file:
After running this script, if the upgrade is for a Nomad version lower
than v1.3.0, update the raft_protocol
in the server's
configuration to 3
and restart the server.